Apple’s WWDC 2010 keynote brought many new innovative
announcements to the iPhone ecosystem and the introduction of iOS 4, we suspect
that one of the biggest controversies will be over Apple’s new video calling
feature that has “nonexistent” AT&T support at best.
When Steve was about to announce his famous “One More Thing,”
the demonstration froze as a result of overcongested WiFi signals emanating throughout
the keynote room. “I’m doing great except for these guys who aren’t turning
their WiFi off,” he stated.
The big announcement, to the surprise and anticipation of
many in the audience, is two-way video conferencing on the new iPhone 4
hardware. Apple has officially named it FaceTime video calling.
“You can switch to the rear camera so the other person can
see what you’re seeing, and you can use it in portrait or landscape modes,”
said Jobs, giving a live demonstration on stage to a remote caller.
Property of Engadget
As with many great announcments, there is usually always one
drawback. Apple’s FaceTime wil be a WiFi-only feature throughout 2010. Steve
says the company needs to “work a little bit with the cellular providers to get
ready for the future.” In other words, AT&T’s exclusive 5-year agreement
with the fruit-themed toymaker has really put them in a strained position to
implement bandwidth-intensive new features and product innovations over their
network.
Jobs then played a video demonstration of FaceTime working
in many different common environments. The first was of a girl lying in bed
talking to her boyfriend, the second was a sign-language chat with other
signers, and the third was a video all to grandma of her new baby grandson.
“FaceTime is becoming an open industry standard,” said Jobs during
his final remark of the feature. While it’s very unfortunate that this feature will
obviously not be supported over 3G in 2010, and perhaps a good portion of 2011,
this gives more incentive for current iPhone owners to adopt Sprint’s new HTC
EVO 4G offering. In contrast to the iPhone 4, it features video conferencing
over 3G and 4G WiMAX without any network limitations. In fact, every single one
of Sprint’s data plans are unlimited, opposed to AT&T’s infamous new data plan restructuring
that has customers very concerned.